1 / 11

Megan Mocko Department of Statistics, University of Florida Brad Hartlaub

A Two Semester Study: The Effects of an Audience Response System (ARS) on Achievement and Attitudes Towards Statistics in An introductory Statistics Class. Megan Mocko Department of Statistics, University of Florida Brad Hartlaub Department of Mathematics, Kenyon College Tim Jacobbe

morey
Download Presentation

Megan Mocko Department of Statistics, University of Florida Brad Hartlaub

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A Two Semester Study: The Effects of an Audience Response System (ARS) on Achievement and Attitudes Towards Statistics in An introductory Statistics Class Megan Mocko Department of Statistics, University of Florida Brad Hartlaub Department of Mathematics, Kenyon College Tim Jacobbe School of Teaching and Learning, University of Florida

  2. Purpose of Study • Does using an audience response system for classroom participation . . . • Improve students attitudes about statistics? • Improve students understanding of statistics and thus improve their grades? • Outline • What is an audience response system? • Background • Design of the study • Assessments used • Discussion of the findings • Ideas for future research

  3. What is an Audience Response System(ARS)? • Handheld device similar to a TV remote • Teacher asks a question with multiple choice answers and the students respond by pressing the appropriate answer. • The students answer is received and recorded. The class’s results can be viewed, but individual student responses are anonymous. • Manufacturers: H~ITT, TurningPoint, I-Clicker, etc.

  4. Design of the Study • Questions and answers were posted online for both sections to access after the class was over.

  5. Background • Garfield, Hogg, Schau and Whittinghill (2002 suggest that the “desired outcomes of an introductory course include the following categories: learning (student’s understanding, reasoning, thinking), persistence (leading students to use their statistical knowledge and skills after they leave the course) and attitudes and beliefs (about the value and importance of statistics and about themselves as learners and users of statistics” (Garfield, Hogg, Schau, Wittinghall, 2002, para. 8). • Breaking up the lectures into more easily digestible bites increases student learning (Middendorf & Kalish, 1996).

  6. Assessments • Course Assessments • 12 homework assignments • 12 quizzes • 7 ( 13 during second year) labs (“hands on computer activities”) • 4 tests • Survey of Attitudes Towards Statistics - 36+ by Candace Schau • Affect – “positive and negative feelings concerning statistics” • Cognitive Competence – “attitudes about intellectual knowledge and skills applied to statistics” • Value – “attitudes about the usefulness, relevance, and worth of statistics in personal and professional life” • Difficulty – “Attitudes about the difficulty of statistics as a subject” • Interest – “Students self-reported level of individual interest in statistics” • Effort – “Amount of work students say that they expend to learn statistics”

  7. Students Comments • “… the overall concept made me want to think about the answer and try to solve it without giving up.” • “The remotes made you cover information that would be on the exams; caused you to think quick and help you practice on a daily basis.” • “A lot because it’s either you know it or you don’t and that helps you to be more confident in your answers, ” • “Influenced a lot, it made me think on my toes and helped me to recall information in my head. It also helped reinforce what I learned the previous day.” • “It made me pay more attention therefore I participated more. I think that they are good because the teacher can then explain the problem if nobody understood it.” • “I would not have come to class if we didn’t have remotes.” • “I feel like the remote helped only a little.”

  8. Analysis and Conclusions • Analysis The regression equation is GradeInClass = 1606 - 3.60 ClickerIndicator - 0.76 Year_Indicator + 12.1 GenderIndicator - 4.45 Affect + 3.38 Cogn.Comp - 2.60 Difficulty - 0.31 Interest - 0.32 Effort Predictor Coef SE Coef T P Constant 1606 7058 0.23 0.821 ClickerIndicator -3.599 3.391 -1.06 0.295 Year_Indicator -0.759 3.512 -0.22 0.830 GenderIndicator 12.104 3.781 3.20 0.003 Affect -4.450 1.959 -2.27 0.029 Cogn.Comp 3.376 2.888 1.17 0.250 Difficulty -2.600 2.383 -1.09 0.282 Interest -0.307 1.560 -0.20 0.845 Effort -0.324 1.282 -0.25 0.802 • Conclusions: • No statistically significant evidence that remote use or year affected grade at the end of the year. • Limitations: Students were not randomly put into sections each year and there are a few outliers, so residuals do not have as good a normal distribution as we would like. • I still believe that the remotes can be an effective tool to help students become engaged with the material when used in the right way. • More research should be done to test effective use of the remotes in the classroom.

  9. References • Garfield, J., Hogg, B. Schau, C. & Whittinghall, D. (2002). First Courses in Statistical Science: The Status of Educational Reform Efforts. Journal of Statistics Education [online], 10(2). Retrieved December 30, 2009 from http://www.amstat.org/publications/jse/v10n2/garfield. html • Middendorf, J. & Kalish, A. (1996). The “Change Up” in Lectures. National Teaching and Learning Forum, 5(2). Retrieved January 10, 2010 from http://www.indiana.edu/~teaching/allabout/pubs/changeups.shtml • Schau, C., Stevens J., Dauphinee, T., and Del Vecchio, A. (1995). The development and validation of the survey of attitudes toward statistics. Educational and Psychological Measurement, 55, 868-875. • Schau, C. (2003). Students’ attitudes: The “other” important outcome in statistics education. Retrieved December 30, 2009 from http://evaluationandstatistics.com/JSM2003.pdf. • Schau, C. (2003). Survey of Attitudes Toward Statistics +36. Retrieved December 30, 2009 from http://www.evaluationandstatistics.com/sitebuildercontent/sitebuilderfiles/bizwatersats36monkey.pdf.

More Related